![]() Multiple exchanges of literary commentary with particular focus on classical and contemporary Sindhi, Urdu as well as English poetry. He had a warm and friendly voice and eyes dry like desert soil. Then aged around 60, the gentleman named Imdad Hussaini wore his long hair in a ponytail and sported dark stubble, a t-shirt and a pair of jeans. ![]() At one time, during the early tete-a-tete, while commenting on some of Sindh’s birds and insects, he threw himself into the synonyms of ‘firefly’ in Sindhi, not without references to the Sindhi poems in which each synonym had been used, especially verses from Shah Abdul Latif Bhitai’s Shah Jo Risalo. I watched him intently and followed his eyes, which loosely fastened on the roadside, having strayed absently to the contours of the surroundings of the University of Sindh, Jamshoro. ![]() ![]() He chatted to me while he twisted, tossed, caught and rubbed a few cobbles he had picked from a traffic island nearby, and wrote imaginary words on the roadside with one black stone. ![]()
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